-1

I'm trying to increment a value that's the value of a dictionary inside another dictionary and I just can't get it to work.

Dictionary<string, Dictionary<string, int>> logs = new Dictionary<string, Dictionary<string, int>>();
...
...
logs[username].Then(x => x.Value++) // If I use .Select(), the x represents a key value pair.

Unsurprisingly it doesn't work because .Then() doesn't exist in C# so how can I achieve what I'm trying to do?

EDIT: I tried doing

using System.Threading.Tasks;

Dictionary<string, Dictionary<string, int>> logs = new Dictionary<string, Dictionary<string, int>>();
...
...
logs[username].ContinueWith(x => x.Value++)

But it gives me the error that Dictionary<string, int> does not contain a definition for ContinueWith.

7
  • 5
    logs[username][yourKey]++ ?
    – Martheen
    Apr 4, 2021 at 8:04
  • What exactly are you trying to do? Run through the dictionary and increments each of the values by 1?
    – Marko
    Apr 4, 2021 at 8:07
  • 1
    then() is applied on a Promise, but your logs is a dictionary? What would be the equivalient of you code in JS. someojbect = {...}; someobject.then() This doesn't make any sense either. Apr 4, 2021 at 8:10
  • I mean @Martheen gave you the answer on how to set/increment the value on the nested dictionary.
    – Marko
    Apr 4, 2021 at 8:16
  • 1
    @Martheen already supplied the answer logs[username] returns the value from the first dictionary, which is you second dictionary, now you want the data linked to the ip, so logs[username][ip]. incrementing it is just this: logs[username][ip]++ Apr 4, 2021 at 8:37

1 Answer 1

2

What you're doing looks like incrementing the values in the inner dictionary for a given key.

Here is one way to do it:

//using System.Linq

var logs = new Dictionary<string, Dictionary<string, int>>();

logs["user1"] = new Dictionary<string, int>{ {"x", 1}, {"y",2} };

// To increment values of all entries for a user
var userLogs = logs["user1"];
foreach( var userKeys in userLogs.Keys.ToList()) // Please don't miss the ToList()
{
    userLogs[userKeys] += 1;
}

If you wish of a one liner and/or lambdas we could try the following:

logs["user1"].Keys.ToList().ForEach(k => logs["user1"][k] += 1);

If you are trying to increment one value something like the following works:

logs["user1"]["key1"] += 1;
8
  • 2
    The ToList shouldn't be needed as you aren't mutating the Dictionary's Keys or the Key collection itself Apr 4, 2021 at 8:38
  • @pinkfloydx33 Sure? Something like this (C# source encoded in URL) will throw a run-time exception with Collection was modified; enumeration operation may not execute. So I guess a .ToList is required. Same if I do += 1 instead of ++. Either is going to use the set accessor of the indexer, d["c"] = tmp, and it counts as modification. Apr 4, 2021 at 9:10
  • No because you aren't modifying the collection in that manner... You're modifying the value portion of an object already stored by Key. If you were adding/removing keys then yes you would need it. At least it doesn't throw an error on SharpLab or when I try it locally with netcore3/5 Apr 4, 2021 at 9:16
  • Here is the code from the answer. It blows up with the version of the runtime used by tio.run. Are you saying there is a version of .NET where it is different? What version do you have? Apr 4, 2021 at 9:29
  • 1
    The lesson learned after reading @tymtam's new thread, is that if you target .NET 5 (from November 2020) or later, you do not need .ToList() in this situation, but if you target an older version of .NET Core, or .NET Framework, you do need it. Apr 4, 2021 at 11:53

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.